US5188734A - Ultraporous and microporous integral membranes - Google Patents

Ultraporous and microporous integral membranes Download PDF

Info

Publication number
US5188734A
US5188734A US07/838,694 US83869492A US5188734A US 5188734 A US5188734 A US 5188734A US 83869492 A US83869492 A US 83869492A US 5188734 A US5188734 A US 5188734A
Authority
US
United States
Prior art keywords
membranes
membrane
less
casting
flow rate
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Expired - Lifetime
Application number
US07/838,694
Inventor
Robert F. Zepf
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
Pall Filtration and Separations Group Inc
Original Assignee
Memtec America Corp
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Priority claimed from US07/674,907 external-priority patent/US5171445A/en
Application filed by Memtec America Corp filed Critical Memtec America Corp
Priority to US07/838,694 priority Critical patent/US5188734A/en
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of US5188734A publication Critical patent/US5188734A/en
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical
Expired - Lifetime legal-status Critical Current

Links

Images

Classifications

    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B01PHYSICAL OR CHEMICAL PROCESSES OR APPARATUS IN GENERAL
    • B01DSEPARATION
    • B01D71/00Semi-permeable membranes for separation processes or apparatus characterised by the material; Manufacturing processes specially adapted therefor
    • B01D71/06Organic material
    • B01D71/66Polymers having sulfur in the main chain, with or without nitrogen, oxygen or carbon only
    • B01D71/68Polysulfones; Polyethersulfones
    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B01PHYSICAL OR CHEMICAL PROCESSES OR APPARATUS IN GENERAL
    • B01DSEPARATION
    • B01D67/00Processes specially adapted for manufacturing semi-permeable membranes for separation processes or apparatus
    • B01D67/0002Organic membrane manufacture
    • B01D67/0009Organic membrane manufacture by phase separation, sol-gel transition, evaporation or solvent quenching
    • B01D67/0011Casting solutions therefor
    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B01PHYSICAL OR CHEMICAL PROCESSES OR APPARATUS IN GENERAL
    • B01DSEPARATION
    • B01D67/00Processes specially adapted for manufacturing semi-permeable membranes for separation processes or apparatus
    • B01D67/0002Organic membrane manufacture
    • B01D67/0009Organic membrane manufacture by phase separation, sol-gel transition, evaporation or solvent quenching
    • B01D67/0013Casting processes
    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B01PHYSICAL OR CHEMICAL PROCESSES OR APPARATUS IN GENERAL
    • B01DSEPARATION
    • B01D69/00Semi-permeable membranes for separation processes or apparatus characterised by their form, structure or properties; Manufacturing processes specially adapted therefor
    • B01D69/02Semi-permeable membranes for separation processes or apparatus characterised by their form, structure or properties; Manufacturing processes specially adapted therefor characterised by their properties
    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B01PHYSICAL OR CHEMICAL PROCESSES OR APPARATUS IN GENERAL
    • B01DSEPARATION
    • B01D2325/00Details relating to properties of membranes
    • B01D2325/02Details relating to pores or porosity of the membranes
    • B01D2325/022Asymmetric membranes

Definitions

  • the present invention relates to ultraporous and microporous membranes which are useful in materials separations, by filtration, dialysis, and the like, and as supports and containment media for materials, and related uses.
  • it relates to highly asymmetric, integral membranes with a skin and a porous sub-structure or support region.
  • a wide diversity of polymer membranes are known, and have attained wide applicability in diverse uses. Such membranes are characterized by a variety of properties and characteristics, and the selection of a membranes for a particular use is generally a function of the properties required or desired.
  • Ultraporous membranes are generally those with an effective controlling pore diameter of less than about 0.050 micrometers (or sometimes considered to be less than about 0.025 micrometers), down to as 0.005 micrometers, which is the realm of the size of a molecule of, for example, simple sugars and the like.
  • Microporous membranes are those with effective limiting pore diameters of greater than ultraporous, normally greater than about 0.050 micrometers, up to about 1 micrometer, or occasionally more.
  • pore diameter is employed to represent the span across skin pores or controlling pores of a membrane. It is not intended to suggest that all pores are circular and, indeed, most are not, as those of ordinary skill in the art will understand and as FIG. 2 illustrates.
  • Reverse osmosis membranes extend into the reverse osmosis region and below that into the gas separation region.
  • Reverse osmosis membranes are used for ionic separations, under high applied pressure differentials, sufficient to overcome osmotic pressure, and are sometimes said to be dependent on a mechanism which is often characterized as intermolecular dissolution.
  • Such membranes have a dense, non-porous surface skin, and do not function by effects dependent on seive-like characteristics.
  • reverse osmosis is, in material part, dependent on the osmolarity of a solution as a determinant of the separatory characteristics of the reverse osmosis operation, while ultraporous and microporous membranes pass or retain materials predominantly on the basis of their size, at applied pressure differential which are commonly far less, often an order of magnitude less, than reverse osmosis operations, and are ordinarily considered to be substantially different in kind.
  • Gas separation membranes operate on a molecular scale and fractionate gas mixtures based on size and absorption/desorption characteristics.
  • porous membranes An important property of porous membranes is their permeability to flow. In the majority of applications, it is commonly desirable to process effectively the greatest volume of a feed material in the least amount of time. All other things being equal, the higher the flow rate of filtrate or related materials through the membrane, the higher the efficiency and economy of the procedure.
  • Membranes may have a skin or may be skinless, i.e. with an isotropic structure from one face to the other. If a cast liquid film of adequate polymer concentration is quenched in a strong non-solvent, as with polysulfone solutions (or dispersions) quenched in water, the result is a "skinned" membrane, i.e., one with considerably smaller pores on the "skin" side than on the opposite side. If the quench liquid is a weak non-solvent, e.g., by adding solvent to the water, a more open skin and ultimately a skinless membrane can be produced.
  • Membranes can have different structures, generally determined by the technique by which it is synthesized. Examples include fibrous, granular, cellular, and spinodal, and they may be symmetrical, or asymmetric, isotropic or anisotropic (i.e., graded pore density).
  • Fibrous microstructure is most commonly associated with biaxial stretching of films of polymers. This is commonly employed, for example, in the production of porous membranes of polytetrafluoroethylene (TEFLON)®, in the microporous membranes commercially available as (GORETEX)®, among others. It is inherent in the nature of the process that the result is a skinless, symmetrical membrane.
  • TEFLON polytetrafluoroethylene
  • GORETEX commercially available as
  • Granular microstructure can be characteristic of membranes formed by the precipitation of polymer from certain formulations by a nucleation and growth mechanism. Globules or granules of precipitated polymer form and grow, and fuse with other such globules at their points of contact, leaving voids in the interstices which contribute the porosity of the granular mass. Such structures frequently contain "macrovoids” or "finger voids” in regions adjacent to skin imperfections which allow the quench liquid to penetrate the interior. The voids consequently are also skinned and lead to reduced membrane permeability. This occurs most commonly in ultraporous and reverse osmosis membranes. The techniques for the formation of such membranes are illustrated by Michaels, U.S. Pat. No. 3,615,024. The granular microstructure and characteristic "macrovoids" are illustrated by the photomicrographs shown in Wang, U.S. Pat. No. 3,988,245.
  • Cellular pore structures which are honeycombed or spongelike in appearance, are dependent presumably on a precipitation rate that is slower than with granular structures containing macrovoids. They can be skinned or unskinned. The latter structure generally is formed when the precipitation agent is moisture in the air (no liquid quenching during the curing process).
  • a network of thin struts creates the system of contiguous polyhedral shaped cells. Liquid quenched membranes of this type are often associated with a dense or ultraporous skin.
  • Spinodal microstructure occurs when the polymer is precipitated by a spinodal decomposition mechanism, characterized by the formation of two separate liquid phases, one polymer rich and the other polymer poor, under conditions wherein each phase is continuous and dispersed in a characteristic pattern at the point at which the polymer precipitation occurs.
  • the resulting membrane may be, on the one hand, skinless, symmetrical, and uniform throughout, or skinned, asymmetric, and non-isotropic.
  • spinodal structure is intended to mean the characteristic structure attained when a membrane is precipitated by spinodal decomposition, and to reflect the features illustrated in FIG. 1 and, in different scale, FIG. 8 which illustrate, by SEM photomicroscopy the remaining structure when the two, intertangled and intermixed continuous phases of spinodal decomposition are achieved.
  • the spinodal structure represents one of the two continuous phases formed by the precipitated polymer, the other being the void volume within the structure.
  • the skinless symmetrical variety may be formed by thermal quench techniques or by solvent evaporation techniques. Thermal quenching techniques are illustrated by Castro, U.S. Pat. No. 4,247,498.
  • Skinned membranes with a highly asymmetric support structure are shown in Wrasidlo, U.S. Pat. No. 4,629,563, and Wrasidlo, U.S. 4,774,039. These membranes are formed by spinodal decomposition induced by solvent extraction from a cast metastable dispersion of two liquid phases, one polymer rich and the other polymer poor, in a liquid quench bath.
  • the spinodal microstructure has often been preferred in a number of applications.
  • the structure affords good mechanical properties, including tensile strength, elongation at break, and the like, the lowest hydraulic resistance to flow of any of the known microstructures, and offers opportunities to take advantage of the internal structure of the support as a depth filter, as a containment medium for materials, and other like advantages.
  • the skinless, symmetric varieties have rather different uses that the skinned, highly asymmetric membranes of Wrasidlo.
  • Some physical properties including tensile strength and elongation at break, are often lower than desirable, and lower than required for the integrity of some otherwise desirable uses of these membranes.
  • the present invention is intended as, and has as its primary object, an improvement on the process and product of Wrasidlo, cited above.
  • the disclosure of the Wrasidlo patents is incorporated herein by reference.
  • the present invention provides an improved method for making the ultraporous and microporous membranes, wherein interaction of the cast dispersion with the atmosphere prior to solvent extraction in a quench bath is limited to less than 0.5 seconds, and preferably less than 0.25 seconds, and where the casting temperature of the dispersion is materially reduced.
  • ultraporous and microporous membranes are produced which are substantially free of polymer spheres entrained in the support, have increased tensile strength and elongation at break, a materially reduced standard deviation in controlling pore diameter, and an increased population of skin pores, resulting in and demonstrated by exceptionally high flow rates in relation to the controlling pore diameter.
  • FIG. 1 is a reproduction of an SEM photomicrograph showing the characteristic asymmetric spinodal structure of the support region of membranes of the present invention, in a cross section of a fracture face at an enlargement of 650 ⁇ .
  • FIG. 2 is a reproduction of an SEM photomicrograph showing the characteristic skin pores of a membrane of the present invention at an enlargement of 3,000 ⁇ .
  • FIG. 3 is a graph showing the relationship of bubble point and flow for membranes of the present invention compared to comparable, historical values for membranes of the prior art, represented by the Wrasidlo patents cited above.
  • FIG. 4 is a graph showing the relationship of increase in flow rate of the membranes of the invention over the corresponding historical values of production of Wrasidlo membranes of comparable bubble point.
  • FIG. 5 is a graph of bubble point covariance for membranes of the present invention compared to historical, corresponding measurements of membranes of the prior art, represented by the Wrasidlo patents cited above.
  • FIG. 6 is a graph of flow rate covariance for membranes of the present invention compared to historical, corresponding measurements of membranes of the prior art, represented by the Wrasidlo patents cited above.
  • FIG. 7 is reproduction of an SEM photomicrograph showing a membrane made in accordance with Example II of Wrasidlo, showing the high population of polymer spheres, in a section of the support region at an enlargement of 1,800 ⁇ . A spinodal structure is apparent.
  • FIG. 8 is a reproduction of an SEM photomicrograph showing a membrane made in accordance with the present invention, showing the very low population of polymer spheres, in a section of the support region at an enlargement of 1,800 ⁇ . The spinodal structure of the membrane is shown in detail.
  • the present invention is directed to improved membranes, and to the improved method for making such membranes.
  • a characterization of the method for making membranes is described and characterized initially.
  • the major elements which differ from Wrasidlo are found in the limitation of the interaction of the cast dispersion with the atmosphere prior to solvent extraction in a quench bath to less than 0.5 seconds, and preferably less than 0.25 seconds, and the employment of a casting temperature of the dispersion materially less than those commonly employed in the usual techniques, generally on the order of about 6° to 14° C. or more.
  • Other process parameters may be subject to adjustment in relation to these parameters to assure the maintenance of the requisite properties in the membrane produced, but these are generally minor in degree and are reactive to and compensatory for the primary changes in the operating conditions and steps.
  • the lower casting temperature is an important benefit to the process. It has been learned that lower temperatures make the system less variable and less vulnerable to variation in substantially all parameters. As the temperature gets closer to ambient temperatures, as one example, distortions of the casting equipment through thermal expansion and like effects are reduced, and it has proved simpler and more reliable to maintain working tolerances. This in turn provides better control over the casting and quenching operations, so that quality of the product is easier to establish and maintain. Utility costs of the operation are reduced and, in new installations, simpler temperature control equipment may prove effective.
  • the method of the present invention involves the essential steps of mixing a polymer, a solvent, and a non-solvent to produce a metastable liquid-liquid dispersion consisting of a polymer-rich phase and a solvent-rich (polymer-poor) phase within the binodal or spinodal at a casting temperature, casting the dispersion into a thin film at the casting temperature, passing the cast layer within a time of less than 0.5 seconds at the casting temperature into a solvent extraction quench bath of non-solvent quench liquid in which the solvent is freely miscible and in which the polymer is substantially insoluble, and effecting precipitation of the polymer by spinodal decomposition, and recovering the membrane from the quench bath.
  • the residence time between the casting operation and the quench bath is reduced by one order of magnitude.
  • a reduction in casting temperature on the order of about 10° C. is also imposed.
  • the dwell time should be kept below 0.5 seconds, and preferably below 0.25 seconds, and is desirably the minimum that can be achieved with the constraints of the casting equipment employed.
  • the casting dispersion should, as noted in the Tables, have an optical density of from about 0.5 to 1, depending on the pore diameter sought; generally, higher optical densities produce higher pore diameters.
  • the casting dispersion is ordinarily cast onto a moving support by means of a doctor blade with a knife gap of typically about 250 to 450 micrometers, often about 300 micrometers; after the quench, the membrane produced is typically about 85 to 105 micrometers in thickness for ultraporous membranes, and about 105 to about 145 for microporous membranes.
  • the values may be increased or decreased as desired, as is well known in the art. While as described, the procedure produces flat sheet membrane, the present invention is equally applicable to casting hollow fiber membrane, and will indeed facilitate the dispersion casting operation by reducing or even eliminating the atmospheric exposure time previously thought to be necessary to such procedures.
  • the casting dispersion is spin cast through a hollow die rather than being cast onto a support in a flat film form.
  • the lumen of the hollow fiber is sometimes formed by air or inert gas and the outside quenched in non-solvent liquid, but usually the quench liquid flows through the center and skins the Lumen. If the lumen is formed by a gas, it should be introduced as close to the quench bath as possible.
  • the die may be immersed in the quench bath in some cases, reducing the atmospheric dwell time of the outer surface of the cast membrane to zero. It is possible, of course, to provide a hollow fiber with both inner and outer skins by employing the quench liquid in both the lumen and the quench bath.
  • the cast dispersion is passed into a quench bath, most commonly of water, frequently at or near the casting temperature.
  • the quench operation precipitates the polymer to produce a skin having the requisite pore sizes, and a support region having the characteristic spinodal structure with a high degree of asymmetry, increasing from the region immediately adjacent to the skin to the opposite face.
  • the resulting membrane is ordinarily washed to free it of entrained solvent, and may be dried to expel additional increments of solvent, diluent, and quench liquid, and thus recover the membrane.
  • the casting operation is amenable to a wide variety of known variations, familiar to those of ordinary skill in the art, as discussed by Wrasidlo and others in the prior art. So long as the criteria defined for the present invention are met, none of these are excluded.
  • the resulting membrane produced by the process of the present invention shares a number of characteristics in common with those taught by Wrasidlo and used in commerce in the practice of his technology. There are substantial differences which are attained, however.
  • the membrane is produced substantially substantially free of the artifacts of discontinuous dispersion in the casting medium.
  • negligible numbers of polymer spheres have been observed in membranes cast by the method of the present invention. Compare the membrane of the present invention shown in FIG. 8 with FIG. 7, showing the prior art problem, which is now largely resolved. The requirement for the removal of such materials as a part of the membrane wash operations is now eliminated or greatly reduced, reducing the time of the wash, the amount of water or other wash constituents is reduced substantially, and production of finished product are simplified.
  • pore diameter of the skin pores is far more consistent, as shown by bubble point testing.
  • Testing of membranes of the present invention shows that the bubble points desired are achieved far more readily and consistently at all points in the casting operation, from start-up to conclusion, with markedly reduced standard deviation in pore diameter for all pore sizes.
  • Pore diameter is the primary quality control parameter in such membranes, and bubble point is the convenient parameter for defining microporous membrane integrity, the ultimate criteria being bacterial or microsphere challenge tests.
  • Another feature of the membranes of the present invention is the material increase in flow rates for a given controlling pore size. While the relationships and physical features of the membrane of the present invention which determine flow rates have not been fully explored as yet, the data show a substantial increase in flow rate as a function of pore diameter (or pore radius, as discussed in Wrasidlo). The data suggest an increase in the total number of pores produced in the membrane skin, and possibly a narrower distribution of pore diameter, with few pores having a diameter materially less than the controlling pore diameter as determined by bubble point measurements. See FIG. 2.
  • FIG. 3 demonstrates flow rate plotted against pore diameter, for the membranes of the examples provided in the present application, including the comparative examples. It is apparent that at a given pore diameter, the flow rate is materially increased in the present invention, when compared to the historical values achieved by the Wrasidlo teachings.
  • the flow rates are less susceptible to variation during manufacture of the membrane, as reflected by a standard deviation in flow rate of normally about 120 or less, more often about 100 or less, and less than 75 except for the largest pore diameters.
  • This improved consistency at the higher flow rates is indicative of a material change in the utility of these membranes for the user, and enables the present invention to assure higher levels of quality assurance to users, particularly those with critical applications for such membranes.
  • covariance of flow rates of the membranes made by the new procedures of the present invention are less than 6, and for most pore diameters, less than 5.
  • FIG. 6 also demonstrates that flow rate covariance of membranes made by the Wrasidlo procedure has historically been greater than 12.5. Standard deviations are materially reduced as well.
  • the consistency achieved in the present invention is a per se benefit in the production and use of the membranes of the present invention, and represents a very substantial gain in productivity and the reduction of scrap or out-of specification materials.
  • the occurrence of scrap has been reduced to a level consistently less than 5% of production, and long production runs with no losses to scrap are now frequently attained.
  • the improved consistency is also of compelling import to the integrity of the membrane offered to users.
  • the improved consistency in pore diameter and in flow rate are accompanied by a material increase in the flow rate for each pore diameter, ranging from an increase in flow rate of from 110 ml/min. at a bubble point of about 65, up to about 500 ml/min. at a bubble point of about 30, representing a gain in flow rate of 10 to 20 percent at a given pore diameter.
  • FIG. 1 A photomicrograph showing the characteristic spinodal structure of the membranes of the present invention is shown in FIG. 1.
  • the structure is that produced by spinodal decomposition of the metastable dispersion in the membrane casting operation, and the figure illustrates the significant asymmetry which makes such membranes highly effective as depth filters, affording the gradual change in the apertures through the support region such that the changing effective pore diameter is progressive.
  • the skin of the membrane is quite thin, and difficult to delineate precisely by photomicroscopy in cross section. Where skin pores are directly observable, as shown in FIG. 2, the number of pores and their general regularity is directly observable.
  • the formulations employed are those set forth in Table I and Table II, above.
  • the conditions of casting are also those set forth in the tables.
  • Both the examples of the present invention and those based on the Wrasidlo teachings were performed on the same equipment, and under the same conditions; the only differences are those set forth in the above Tables.
  • no adjustments of the formulations to achieve specifically targeted pore diameters were made in most cases, with the results that some of the bubble point values are higher than desired. Further adjustments to achieve the desired bubble point, reflecting a specifically required pore diameter are know to the art, and are specifically taught by Wrasidlo.
  • each Example represents a roll of membrane, made as described above, bubble point (BP) is reported as the arithmetic mean of all quality control samples taken for each roll.
  • the bubble point represents the pressure, in psi, of breakthrough of air applied to a 90 mm disc sample wetted with distilled water, common to the membrane art.
  • Flow is reported as the arithmetic mean of all samples for each roll and represents the flow of distilled water, in ml per minute, passing through a 90 mm disc at an applied pressure of 10 psi.
  • BRK represents tensile strength at break in grams, while ELG is elongation at break, in percent.

Abstract

Ultraporous and microporous polymer membranes cast from metastable dispersions are significantly improved by limiting the time of environmental exposure to less than about 0.5, preferably less than 0.25 seconds, between casting and quenching, and reducing the casting temperatures about 10° to about 20° C. lower than the usual prior art values. The resulting membranes have far less debris entrained in the membrane, far more consistent and uniform pore sizes, a substantially greater number of skin pores, and greatly increased flow rates for any given pore diameter. The membranes are highly asymmetrical and skinned with a standard deviation in flow rate of less than about 400 and a flow rate covariance of less than about 6, with skin pore diameters of from about 0.001 μ.

Description

This is a division of application Ser. No. 07/674,907, filed Mar. 26, 1991.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
1. Technical Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to ultraporous and microporous membranes which are useful in materials separations, by filtration, dialysis, and the like, and as supports and containment media for materials, and related uses. In particular, it relates to highly asymmetric, integral membranes with a skin and a porous sub-structure or support region.
2. Description of the Prior Art
A wide diversity of polymer membranes are known, and have attained wide applicability in diverse uses. Such membranes are characterized by a variety of properties and characteristics, and the selection of a membranes for a particular use is generally a function of the properties required or desired.
The most characteristic property of concern for most applications is the effective controlling pore diameter, which defines what materials may pass through the membrane, and which are retained. Ultraporous membranes are generally those with an effective controlling pore diameter of less than about 0.050 micrometers (or sometimes considered to be less than about 0.025 micrometers), down to as 0.005 micrometers, which is the realm of the size of a molecule of, for example, simple sugars and the like. Microporous membranes are those with effective limiting pore diameters of greater than ultraporous, normally greater than about 0.050 micrometers, up to about 1 micrometer, or occasionally more.
As used in the present application, the term "pore diameter" is employed to represent the span across skin pores or controlling pores of a membrane. It is not intended to suggest that all pores are circular and, indeed, most are not, as those of ordinary skill in the art will understand and as FIG. 2 illustrates.
Smaller pore membranes extend into the reverse osmosis region and below that into the gas separation region. Reverse osmosis membranes are used for ionic separations, under high applied pressure differentials, sufficient to overcome osmotic pressure, and are sometimes said to be dependent on a mechanism which is often characterized as intermolecular dissolution. Such membranes have a dense, non-porous surface skin, and do not function by effects dependent on seive-like characteristics. As a distinguishing characteristic, reverse osmosis is, in material part, dependent on the osmolarity of a solution as a determinant of the separatory characteristics of the reverse osmosis operation, while ultraporous and microporous membranes pass or retain materials predominantly on the basis of their size, at applied pressure differential which are commonly far less, often an order of magnitude less, than reverse osmosis operations, and are ordinarily considered to be substantially different in kind. Gas separation membranes operate on a molecular scale and fractionate gas mixtures based on size and absorption/desorption characteristics.
An important property of porous membranes is their permeability to flow. In the majority of applications, it is commonly desirable to process effectively the greatest volume of a feed material in the least amount of time. All other things being equal, the higher the flow rate of filtrate or related materials through the membrane, the higher the efficiency and economy of the procedure.
It has long been known that flow rates are proportional to pore diameters, and pore population. Taken together, these define an effective area through which fluids may pass. In practice, the relationship is ordinarily very approximate and highly variable.
Membranes may have a skin or may be skinless, i.e. with an isotropic structure from one face to the other. If a cast liquid film of adequate polymer concentration is quenched in a strong non-solvent, as with polysulfone solutions (or dispersions) quenched in water, the result is a "skinned" membrane, i.e., one with considerably smaller pores on the "skin" side than on the opposite side. If the quench liquid is a weak non-solvent, e.g., by adding solvent to the water, a more open skin and ultimately a skinless membrane can be produced.
When a skin is present, as generally in the case with gas separation, reverse osmosis, and ultrafiltration membranes and sometimes with microporous membranes, it is most often a dense film of polymer material with very small pores that extend into a support region of larger pores. If the pores are large enough, they can be observed by electron scanning microscopy, and this is true in the microporous range. However, because of the limitations of SEM techniques pores may not always be directly observable at diameters of less than about 0.050 micrometers, but their presence can be confirmed by the retentivity characteristics of the membrane.
Membranes can have different structures, generally determined by the technique by which it is synthesized. Examples include fibrous, granular, cellular, and spinodal, and they may be symmetrical, or asymmetric, isotropic or anisotropic (i.e., graded pore density).
Fibrous microstructure is most commonly associated with biaxial stretching of films of polymers. This is commonly employed, for example, in the production of porous membranes of polytetrafluoroethylene (TEFLON)®, in the microporous membranes commercially available as (GORETEX)®, among others. It is inherent in the nature of the process that the result is a skinless, symmetrical membrane.
Granular microstructure can be characteristic of membranes formed by the precipitation of polymer from certain formulations by a nucleation and growth mechanism. Globules or granules of precipitated polymer form and grow, and fuse with other such globules at their points of contact, leaving voids in the interstices which contribute the porosity of the granular mass. Such structures frequently contain "macrovoids" or "finger voids" in regions adjacent to skin imperfections which allow the quench liquid to penetrate the interior. The voids consequently are also skinned and lead to reduced membrane permeability. This occurs most commonly in ultraporous and reverse osmosis membranes. The techniques for the formation of such membranes are illustrated by Michaels, U.S. Pat. No. 3,615,024. The granular microstructure and characteristic "macrovoids" are illustrated by the photomicrographs shown in Wang, U.S. Pat. No. 3,988,245.
Cellular pore structures which are honeycombed or spongelike in appearance, are dependent presumably on a precipitation rate that is slower than with granular structures containing macrovoids. They can be skinned or unskinned. The latter structure generally is formed when the precipitation agent is moisture in the air (no liquid quenching during the curing process). A network of thin struts creates the system of contiguous polyhedral shaped cells. Liquid quenched membranes of this type are often associated with a dense or ultraporous skin.
Spinodal microstructure, as mentioned earlier, occurs when the polymer is precipitated by a spinodal decomposition mechanism, characterized by the formation of two separate liquid phases, one polymer rich and the other polymer poor, under conditions wherein each phase is continuous and dispersed in a characteristic pattern at the point at which the polymer precipitation occurs. Depending on the specific characteristics of the technique for attaining the spinodal decomposition mechanism, the resulting membrane may be, on the one hand, skinless, symmetrical, and uniform throughout, or skinned, asymmetric, and non-isotropic.
In the present application, the term spinodal structure is intended to mean the characteristic structure attained when a membrane is precipitated by spinodal decomposition, and to reflect the features illustrated in FIG. 1 and, in different scale, FIG. 8 which illustrate, by SEM photomicroscopy the remaining structure when the two, intertangled and intermixed continuous phases of spinodal decomposition are achieved. As those of ordinary skill in the art will understand, the spinodal structure represents one of the two continuous phases formed by the precipitated polymer, the other being the void volume within the structure.
The skinless symmetrical variety may be formed by thermal quench techniques or by solvent evaporation techniques. Thermal quenching techniques are illustrated by Castro, U.S. Pat. No. 4,247,498.
Skinned membranes with a highly asymmetric support structure are shown in Wrasidlo, U.S. Pat. No. 4,629,563, and Wrasidlo, U.S. 4,774,039. These membranes are formed by spinodal decomposition induced by solvent extraction from a cast metastable dispersion of two liquid phases, one polymer rich and the other polymer poor, in a liquid quench bath.
All the various techniques involved, and the membranes produced, have achieved a measure of commercial success. The spinodal microstructure, however, has often been preferred in a number of applications. As a general rule, the structure affords good mechanical properties, including tensile strength, elongation at break, and the like, the lowest hydraulic resistance to flow of any of the known microstructures, and offers opportunities to take advantage of the internal structure of the support as a depth filter, as a containment medium for materials, and other like advantages. As is well known to the art, the skinless, symmetric varieties have rather different uses that the skinned, highly asymmetric membranes of Wrasidlo.
In the dispersion casting technique of Wrasidlo, a number of disadvantages have been encountered. These include the following:
When the polymer is precipitated from the dispersion, there are frequent occurrences of small discontinuities. The reason for this is not fully understood, but the result is the formation, within the microstructure of the membrane support, substantial number, and at time vast numbers of tiny polymer spheres. These discrete spheres are difficult to remove by washing, and substantial numbers may remain in the membrane. This is highly undesirable, in most uses of the membranes, since there are few applications where the introduction of these spheres into a filtrate is acceptable. See the spheres illustrated in FIG. 7, which represent a severe case, after normal washing of the membrane.
The procedure for the formation of the membranes taught by Wrasidlo has over time proved to be excessively variable in the controlling pore diameter, flow rate for a given pore diameter, and in the occurrence of macro flaws in the integrity of the skin, leading to the loss of an unacceptable proportion of the membranes to a failure to satisfy necessary quality control standards. Quality control rejection of such membranes often has been substantial.
Some physical properties, including tensile strength and elongation at break, are often lower than desirable, and lower than required for the integrity of some otherwise desirable uses of these membranes.
These membranes are often employed in critical applications in the electronics industry, food processing, processing of biological materials, as sterilizing filters, and the like. Deficiencies in meeting the quality control requirements of such sensitive fields of use are quite unacceptable.
OBJECTS AND SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
It is an object of the present invention to improve the technology by which skinned, asymmetric ultraporous and microporous membranes having a support structure with an asymmetric spinodal structure are produced, and to provide such membranes with improved properties and characteristics, and to satisfy the highest standards of quality control and product integrity.
The present invention is intended as, and has as its primary object, an improvement on the process and product of Wrasidlo, cited above. The disclosure of the Wrasidlo patents is incorporated herein by reference.
In one aspect, the present invention provides an improved method for making the ultraporous and microporous membranes, wherein interaction of the cast dispersion with the atmosphere prior to solvent extraction in a quench bath is limited to less than 0.5 seconds, and preferably less than 0.25 seconds, and where the casting temperature of the dispersion is materially reduced.
In another aspect of the present invention, ultraporous and microporous membranes are produced which are substantially free of polymer spheres entrained in the support, have increased tensile strength and elongation at break, a materially reduced standard deviation in controlling pore diameter, and an increased population of skin pores, resulting in and demonstrated by exceptionally high flow rates in relation to the controlling pore diameter.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
FIG. 1 is a reproduction of an SEM photomicrograph showing the characteristic asymmetric spinodal structure of the support region of membranes of the present invention, in a cross section of a fracture face at an enlargement of 650×.
FIG. 2 is a reproduction of an SEM photomicrograph showing the characteristic skin pores of a membrane of the present invention at an enlargement of 3,000×.
FIG. 3 is a graph showing the relationship of bubble point and flow for membranes of the present invention compared to comparable, historical values for membranes of the prior art, represented by the Wrasidlo patents cited above.
FIG. 4 is a graph showing the relationship of increase in flow rate of the membranes of the invention over the corresponding historical values of production of Wrasidlo membranes of comparable bubble point.
FIG. 5 is a graph of bubble point covariance for membranes of the present invention compared to historical, corresponding measurements of membranes of the prior art, represented by the Wrasidlo patents cited above.
FIG. 6 is a graph of flow rate covariance for membranes of the present invention compared to historical, corresponding measurements of membranes of the prior art, represented by the Wrasidlo patents cited above.
FIG. 7 is reproduction of an SEM photomicrograph showing a membrane made in accordance with Example II of Wrasidlo, showing the high population of polymer spheres, in a section of the support region at an enlargement of 1,800×. A spinodal structure is apparent.
FIG. 8 is a reproduction of an SEM photomicrograph showing a membrane made in accordance with the present invention, showing the very low population of polymer spheres, in a section of the support region at an enlargement of 1,800×. The spinodal structure of the membrane is shown in detail.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
The present invention is directed to improved membranes, and to the improved method for making such membranes. In the following discussion, a characterization of the method for making membranes is described and characterized initially.
In the method of the present invention, the process of the Wrasidlo patents, discussed and cited hereinabove, is the starting point of the work, and the relevant disclosure of the Wrasidlo method is accordingly incorporated by reference.
In present method, the major elements which differ from Wrasidlo are found in the limitation of the interaction of the cast dispersion with the atmosphere prior to solvent extraction in a quench bath to less than 0.5 seconds, and preferably less than 0.25 seconds, and the employment of a casting temperature of the dispersion materially less than those commonly employed in the usual techniques, generally on the order of about 6° to 14° C. or more. Other process parameters may be subject to adjustment in relation to these parameters to assure the maintenance of the requisite properties in the membrane produced, but these are generally minor in degree and are reactive to and compensatory for the primary changes in the operating conditions and steps.
It has long been known that the cast film of the metastable dispersion in the Wrasidlo technology interacts with the atmosphere, and that the properties of the membrane, and particularly the skin pores of the membrane, are sensitive to variations in temperature and humidity, velocity and direction of air flow, and perhaps others. Controlling these parameters has received a considerable level of attention and, indeed, some have taken steps intended to take advantage of these interactions. See Fuji Photo Film Co. Ltd., G.B. 2, 199,786 A, wherein the exposure and dwell time in the atmosphere and the humidity are increased to attempt to achieve certain benefits. The conventional thinking has been that moisture in the atmosphere initiates the requisite pores at the immediate film/air interface which have diameters proportional to the water vapor concentration and exposure times.
The view in the art for liquid quenched hydrophobic membrane production has at least in part been influenced by the limitations of the commonly employed equipment used to cast and quench such membranes. In large measure, such equipment has been designed and built on the basis that relatively long exposure times in the atmosphere are generally beneficial. It has been common to employ residence times of atmospheric exposure greater than 1 second, and often longer than 5 seconds. Most equipment cannot attain dwell times between the casting operation and the quench bath of less than 1 second without specific modifications. Since such modifications run counter to the conventional wisdom in the art, there has never been any incentive to do so.
It has now been found that residence times of materially less than 1 second, employed with a materially reduced casting temperature, are of quite surprising and unexpected benefit. As discussed in detail below, the membrane product is quite substantially improved in a number of properties and parameters.
As Wrasidlo has previously pointed out, all the parameters of the casting procedure and the conditions of operation are mutually interdependent. A change of one parameter will require a correlating change in at least one other parameter. If the environmental residence time is reduced, as required in the present invention, to less than 0.5 seconds, and preferably less than 0.25 seconds, for a casting formulation and conditions which had been developed for a longer exposure time, of, say, 1 to 5 seconds, an unsuitable membrane will be obtained if no other parameters are adjusted to balance the effect on the system of the rapid passage into the quench liquid.
It has also been known in the art that for any given dispersion and any given set of casting conditions, there is a relatively narrow casting temperature variance which will be effective. This is generally monitored directly, and correlated with the optical density of the metastable dispersion, in order to produce the desired membrane. If the temperature of the casting dope is too high or too low, unsuitable membrane or even no membrane at all will be produced. In the context of the present invention, the appropriate temperature will be lower than that for the same dispersion when cast at longer environmental dwell times, but it is not possible to define the precise temperature without working trials of the system and confirmation of the results through analytical techniques common to the art. As a general rule, the necessary casting temperature will be on the order of 6° to 14° C. or more, often on the order of about 10° to 12° C., below the casting temperature appropriate to 1 second environmental dwell time.
The lower casting temperature is an important benefit to the process. It has been learned that lower temperatures make the system less variable and less vulnerable to variation in substantially all parameters. As the temperature gets closer to ambient temperatures, as one example, distortions of the casting equipment through thermal expansion and like effects are reduced, and it has proved simpler and more reliable to maintain working tolerances. This in turn provides better control over the casting and quenching operations, so that quality of the product is easier to establish and maintain. Utility costs of the operation are reduced and, in new installations, simpler temperature control equipment may prove effective.
It is believed, although there is no wish to be bound thereby, that reduced casting temperature plays a direct role in the reduction of polymer spheres entrained in the membrane as an artifact of small proportions of a separately dispersed phase in the casting dispersion. See FIG. 7, which shows such polymer spheres in a prior art membrane. It appears that the spinodal decomposition mechanism operates more uniformly and exclusively at the lower temperatures employed in the present invention, resulting in substantially no incidence of such polymer spheres. It is possible that this result is partly or wholly attributable to some other factor involved in the system, of course, but it remains the case that the high temperature casting of the prior art consistently produced such polymer spheres, and few and often none are observed in the procedure of the present invention.
In practice, the method of the present invention involves the essential steps of mixing a polymer, a solvent, and a non-solvent to produce a metastable liquid-liquid dispersion consisting of a polymer-rich phase and a solvent-rich (polymer-poor) phase within the binodal or spinodal at a casting temperature, casting the dispersion into a thin film at the casting temperature, passing the cast layer within a time of less than 0.5 seconds at the casting temperature into a solvent extraction quench bath of non-solvent quench liquid in which the solvent is freely miscible and in which the polymer is substantially insoluble, and effecting precipitation of the polymer by spinodal decomposition, and recovering the membrane from the quench bath.
As noted in the Wrasidlo patents, cited above and incorporated herein by reference, a substantial number of polymers, solvents, non-solvents, and quench liquids have been employed, and have been formulated into casting dispersions suitable for casting membranes with a wide spectrum of pore diameters. All of these are contemplated in the present invention. For convenience, the present invention is discussed in the most common of these systems, where the polymer is a polysulfone, the solvent is dimethylformamide, the non-solvent diluent is t-amyl alcohol, and the quench liquid is water.
There are several standard pore diameters which have achieved common commercial acceptance for such polyysulfone membranes. These include molecular weight cutoff values of 10,000 and 100,000 Daltons, and pore diameters of 0.1, 0.2 and 0.45 micrometers. The basis for casting the commercially available membranes according to Wrasidlo is shown in Table I:
              TABLE I                                                     
______________________________________                                    
Pore Diameter                                                             
           10K     100K     0.1μ                                       
                                  0.2μ                                 
                                        0.45μ                          
Polysulfone                                                               
           14-16   12-14    10-12 10-12 10-12                             
DMF        80-82   74-76    72-74 72-74 72-74                             
t-Amyl alcohol                                                            
           3-5     11-13    14-16 14-16 14-16                             
O.D.       .08-.10 .10-.12  .17-.22                                       
                                  .20-.32                                 
                                        .32-.40                           
Casting Temp.                                                             
           49-52   49-52    49-52 49-52 49-52                             
Time to Quench                                                            
           1       1        1     1     1                                 
______________________________________                                    
 Notes:                                                                   
 The polysulfone is Amoco Udell P3500.                                    
 All proportions are in weight percent.                                   
 O.D. is optical density of the dispersion.                               
 Casting temperature is given in °C.                               
 Time to quench is the dwell time in seconds between the doctor blade and 
 the quench bath.                                                         
The corresponding parameters for the same membranes cast in accordance with the present invention area shown in Table II:
              TABLE II                                                    
______________________________________                                    
Pore Diameter                                                             
           10K     100K     0.1μ                                       
                                  0.2μ                                 
                                        0.45μ                          
Polysulfone                                                               
           14-16   12-14    10-12 10-12 10-12                             
DMF        80-82   74-76    73-75 72-74 72-74                             
t-Amyl alcohol                                                            
           3-5     11-13    14-16 14-16 14-16                             
O.D.       .08-.10 .10-.12  .24-.25                                       
                                  .33-.40                                 
                                        .60-.80                           
Casting Temp.                                                             
           35-43   35-43    35-40 35-39 35-39                             
Time to Quench                                                            
           0.1     0.1      0.1   0.1   0.1                               
______________________________________                                    
 Notes:                                                                   
 The polysulfone is Amoco Udell P3500.                                    
 All proportions are in weight percent.                                   
 O.D. is optical density of the dispersion.                               
 Casting temperature is given in °C.                               
 Time to quench is the dwell time in seconds between the doctor blade and 
 the quench bath.                                                         
As those of ordinary skill in the art will readily recognize, the residence time between the casting operation and the quench bath is reduced by one order of magnitude. A reduction in casting temperature on the order of about 10° C. is also imposed. In a more general sense, the dwell time should be kept below 0.5 seconds, and preferably below 0.25 seconds, and is desirably the minimum that can be achieved with the constraints of the casting equipment employed.
The casting dispersion should, as noted in the Tables, have an optical density of from about 0.5 to 1, depending on the pore diameter sought; generally, higher optical densities produce higher pore diameters.
The casting dispersion is ordinarily cast onto a moving support by means of a doctor blade with a knife gap of typically about 250 to 450 micrometers, often about 300 micrometers; after the quench, the membrane produced is typically about 85 to 105 micrometers in thickness for ultraporous membranes, and about 105 to about 145 for microporous membranes. The values may be increased or decreased as desired, as is well known in the art. While as described, the procedure produces flat sheet membrane, the present invention is equally applicable to casting hollow fiber membrane, and will indeed facilitate the dispersion casting operation by reducing or even eliminating the atmospheric exposure time previously thought to be necessary to such procedures.
In application of the present invention to the casting of hollow fiber, the casting dispersion is spin cast through a hollow die rather than being cast onto a support in a flat film form. The lumen of the hollow fiber is sometimes formed by air or inert gas and the outside quenched in non-solvent liquid, but usually the quench liquid flows through the center and skins the Lumen. If the lumen is formed by a gas, it should be introduced as close to the quench bath as possible. As those familiar with hollow fiber casting are aware, the die may be immersed in the quench bath in some cases, reducing the atmospheric dwell time of the outer surface of the cast membrane to zero. It is possible, of course, to provide a hollow fiber with both inner and outer skins by employing the quench liquid in both the lumen and the quench bath.
The cast dispersion is passed into a quench bath, most commonly of water, frequently at or near the casting temperature. In the bath, the quench operation precipitates the polymer to produce a skin having the requisite pore sizes, and a support region having the characteristic spinodal structure with a high degree of asymmetry, increasing from the region immediately adjacent to the skin to the opposite face. The resulting membrane is ordinarily washed to free it of entrained solvent, and may be dried to expel additional increments of solvent, diluent, and quench liquid, and thus recover the membrane.
The casting operation is amenable to a wide variety of known variations, familiar to those of ordinary skill in the art, as discussed by Wrasidlo and others in the prior art. So long as the criteria defined for the present invention are met, none of these are excluded.
The resulting membrane produced by the process of the present invention shares a number of characteristics in common with those taught by Wrasidlo and used in commerce in the practice of his technology. There are substantial differences which are attained, however.
It is a very great advantage of the improvements provided by the present invention that the membrane is produced substantially substantially free of the artifacts of discontinuous dispersion in the casting medium. To date, only negligible numbers of polymer spheres have been observed in membranes cast by the method of the present invention. Compare the membrane of the present invention shown in FIG. 8 with FIG. 7, showing the prior art problem, which is now largely resolved. The requirement for the removal of such materials as a part of the membrane wash operations is now eliminated or greatly reduced, reducing the time of the wash, the amount of water or other wash constituents is reduced substantially, and production of finished product are simplified.
It is another significant achievement of the present invention that the pore diameter of the skin pores is far more consistent, as shown by bubble point testing. Testing of membranes of the present invention shows that the bubble points desired are achieved far more readily and consistently at all points in the casting operation, from start-up to conclusion, with markedly reduced standard deviation in pore diameter for all pore sizes. Pore diameter is the primary quality control parameter in such membranes, and bubble point is the convenient parameter for defining microporous membrane integrity, the ultimate criteria being bacterial or microsphere challenge tests.
Indeed, for most pore diameters, it is now possible to maintain production at bubble point measurements having a standard deviation of less than 3, compared to a historical value of about 5 or more for such membranes, although in smaller pore sizes it may be necessary to accept a slightly higher standard deviation of less than 5, compared to a historical value of 9 or more for comparable membranes. Covariance in bubble point is less than 8, and ordinarily and preferably less than 5, compared to historic values of 9 or higher, and most often above 11 or even higher, as illustrated in FIG. 5. The skin pores are illustrated in FIG. 2, revealing both a high population of pores, a large proportion of which are at or near the effective controlling pore diameter.
Another feature of the membranes of the present invention is the material increase in flow rates for a given controlling pore size. While the relationships and physical features of the membrane of the present invention which determine flow rates have not been fully explored as yet, the data show a substantial increase in flow rate as a function of pore diameter (or pore radius, as discussed in Wrasidlo). The data suggest an increase in the total number of pores produced in the membrane skin, and possibly a narrower distribution of pore diameter, with few pores having a diameter materially less than the controlling pore diameter as determined by bubble point measurements. See FIG. 2.
What the data do show with Certainty is represented in the data plotted in FIG. 3, which demonstrates flow rate plotted against pore diameter, for the membranes of the examples provided in the present application, including the comparative examples. It is apparent that at a given pore diameter, the flow rate is materially increased in the present invention, when compared to the historical values achieved by the Wrasidlo teachings.
In addition, the flow rates are less susceptible to variation during manufacture of the membrane, as reflected by a standard deviation in flow rate of normally about 120 or less, more often about 100 or less, and less than 75 except for the largest pore diameters. This improved consistency at the higher flow rates is indicative of a material change in the utility of these membranes for the user, and enables the present invention to assure higher levels of quality assurance to users, particularly those with critical applications for such membranes. As shown in FIG. 6, covariance of flow rates of the membranes made by the new procedures of the present invention are less than 6, and for most pore diameters, less than 5. FIG. 6 also demonstrates that flow rate covariance of membranes made by the Wrasidlo procedure has historically been greater than 12.5. Standard deviations are materially reduced as well.
The consistency achieved in the present invention is a per se benefit in the production and use of the membranes of the present invention, and represents a very substantial gain in productivity and the reduction of scrap or out-of specification materials. The occurrence of scrap has been reduced to a level consistently less than 5% of production, and long production runs with no losses to scrap are now frequently attained. The improved consistency is also of compelling import to the integrity of the membrane offered to users.
As shown in FIG. 4, the improved consistency in pore diameter and in flow rate are accompanied by a material increase in the flow rate for each pore diameter, ranging from an increase in flow rate of from 110 ml/min. at a bubble point of about 65, up to about 500 ml/min. at a bubble point of about 30, representing a gain in flow rate of 10 to 20 percent at a given pore diameter.
A photomicrograph showing the characteristic spinodal structure of the membranes of the present invention is shown in FIG. 1. As those of ordinary skill in the art will recognize, the structure is that produced by spinodal decomposition of the metastable dispersion in the membrane casting operation, and the figure illustrates the significant asymmetry which makes such membranes highly effective as depth filters, affording the gradual change in the apertures through the support region such that the changing effective pore diameter is progressive.
The skin of the membrane is quite thin, and difficult to delineate precisely by photomicroscopy in cross section. Where skin pores are directly observable, as shown in FIG. 2, the number of pores and their general regularity is directly observable.
A number of membranes have been made and tested in accordance with the present invention, and compared with the commercially available embodiments of the Wrasidlo technology. These efforts and comparisons are set out in the following examples.
SPECIFIC EXAMPLES
In the following examples, the formulations employed are those set forth in Table I and Table II, above. The conditions of casting are also those set forth in the tables. Both the examples of the present invention and those based on the Wrasidlo teachings were performed on the same equipment, and under the same conditions; the only differences are those set forth in the above Tables. As inspection will show, no adjustments of the formulations to achieve specifically targeted pore diameters were made in most cases, with the results that some of the bubble point values are higher than desired. Further adjustments to achieve the desired bubble point, reflecting a specifically required pore diameter are know to the art, and are specifically taught by Wrasidlo.
A plurality of rolls of membrane were cast. Each roll was sampled at a plurality of predetermined locations, across the web and throughout the length of the cast membrane. The values for each sample were averaged, and the standard deviation determined, for both bubble point and flow rate. The results obtained are shown in the following Table III:
              TABLE III                                                   
______________________________________                                    
Example                                                                   
       Flow    σ BP   σ                                       
                                 BRK  σ                             
                                           ELG   σ                  
______________________________________                                    
30-1   2393    113     38   0.8  548  21   26    3                        
30-2   2495    100     38   0.6  535  14   30    2                        
30-3   2340    73      36   1.6  544  5    30    3                        
30-4   2311    45      37   1.1  518  16   27    2                        
30-5   2097    73      38   0.7  578  14   30    1                        
30-6   2337    184     38   2.6  607  9    29    2                        
30-7   2232    98      38   1.4  607  23   26    3                        
30-8   2402    74      36   2.1  600  23   24    4                        
30-9   2470    77      36   1.3  558  10   24    2                        
30-10  2586    75      35   2.3  569  8    24    2                        
30-AVE 2366    91.2    37   1.45 566  14.3 27    2.4                      
45-1   1663    110     45   3.1  552  20   29    3                        
45-2   1776    83      44   2.9  536  8    29    3                        
45-3   1495    50      49   3.5  521  13   31    2                        
45-4   1525    38      47   2.1  523  8    29    5                        
45-5   1635    53      45   0.8  538  9    32    3                        
45-6   1671    42      44   1.6  525  11   29    2                        
45-7   1705    56      44   2.2  530  22   29    3                        
45-8   1720    75      44   1.3  529  7    36    1                        
45-9   1742    73      44   3.3  520  19   34    5                        
45-10  1778    59      42   2.2  504  11   28    2                        
45-11  1673    114     46   1.4  556  13   25    3                        
45-12  1844    79      43   3.2  548  10   34    4                        
45-13  1737    118     47   1.5  554  24   30    5                        
45-14  1805    52      46   2.0  561  8    33    2                        
45-15  1697    76      48   1.4  554  15   32    3                        
45-16  1761    87      48   3.0  528  9    29    2                        
45-17  1608    76      48   2.4  584  12   34    2                        
45-18  1779    44      46   3.6  569  15   32    2                        
45-19  1556    53      48   1.7  545  16   32    3                        
45-20  1698    32      45   1.5  547  16   32    3                        
45-21  1626    95      48   1.4  513  18   32    3                        
45-22  1802    43      44   1.7  488  18   30    3                        
45-23  1657    123     42   3.2  568  6    31    2                        
45-24  1747    54      45   3.2  561  17   31    4                        
45-25  1534    108     48   1.6  578  19   29    3                        
45-26  1630    84      46   2.5  561  17   29    4                        
45-27  1634    70      47   2.2  572  13   27    3                        
45-28  1787    57      44   1.8  558  17   29    3                        
45-AVE 1689    71.6    45.6 2.2  544  14   31    3.0                      
55-1   1234    45      57   3.0  574  23   36    5                        
55-2   1296    64      64   1.8  573  14   30    3                        
55-3   1192    47      59   3.0  612  16   34    4                        
55-4   1228    66      58   2.0  595  9    34    2                        
55-5   1359    101     54   2.9  619  11   34    2                        
55-6   1418    26      52   2.4  598  20   36    4                        
55-7   1271    97      56   4.0  600  13   39    3                        
55-8   1319    55      57   2.7  588  16   38    2                        
55-9   1284    76      58   4.2  613  25   35    6                        
55-10  1364    57      57   2.5  609  25   35    4                        
55-11  1561    97      48   2.3  523  20   29    5                        
55-12  1598    66      49   2.3  555  17   32    4                        
55-13  1258    103     56   2.8  553  11   39    4                        
55-14  1439    36      53   1.4  579  15   35    4                        
55-15  1253    87      56   3.0  533  23   28    4                        
55-16  1363    67      54   1.0  573  13   35    3                        
55-17  1387    39      56   2.3  615  12   38    2                        
55-18  1430    60      55   3.2  586  20   37    4                        
55-19  1300    47      56   1.7  520  23   34    6                        
55-20  1410    49      56   1.5  548  25   39    3                        
55-21  1290    61      55   3.5  571  11   33    4                        
55-22  1418    60      54   0.9  590  26   35    4                        
55-AVE 1349    63.9    55.5 2.47 578.5                                    
                                      17.6 34.8  3.7                      
65-1   1146    50      60   2.5  676  22   39    4                        
65-2   1403    22      60   2.4  665  24   40    4                        
65-3   1108    57      59   3.7  648  17   44    4                        
65-4   1115    36      62   1.5  637  26   36    5                        
65-5   1060    65      60   3.6  613  29   34    5                        
65-6   1155    40      60   2.5  610  21   33    3                        
65-7   1013    46      64   4.4  666  19   35    2                        
65-8   1037    30      68   2.8  697  20   36    3                        
65-9   859     93      72   12.0 664  31   39    2                        
65-10  854     77      78   8.4  648  24   36    3                        
65-11  986     76      64   7.6  614  35   35    7                        
65-12  931     82      73   7.5  616  37   36    5                        
65-13  949     61      65   6.4  713  27   33    4                        
65-14  1026    75      62   6.9  694  25   33    4                        
65-15  1046    79      59   2.1  695  24   35    5                        
65-16  1095    47      57   2.5  684  23   34    4                        
65-17  1217    94      55   5.3  642  12   38    4                        
65-18  1346    50      52   4.8  638  23   38    3                        
65-19  1019    37      61   2.1  657  12   37    2                        
65-20  1146    59      58   1.7  658  18   38    3                        
65-21  1017    50      63   3.4  674  14   36    4                        
65-22  1101    40      60   3.4  688  18   38    4                        
65-23  932     83      72   9.4  668  9    34    2                        
65-24  1041    46      63   5.8  630  17   32    3                        
65-AVE 1058    58      62.8 4.7  658  22.0 36.2  3.7                      
______________________________________                                    
In the foregoing data in Table III, each Example represents a roll of membrane, made as described above, bubble point (BP) is reported as the arithmetic mean of all quality control samples taken for each roll. The bubble point represents the pressure, in psi, of breakthrough of air applied to a 90 mm disc sample wetted with distilled water, common to the membrane art. Flow is reported as the arithmetic mean of all samples for each roll and represents the flow of distilled water, in ml per minute, passing through a 90 mm disc at an applied pressure of 10 psi. BRK represents tensile strength at break in grams, while ELG is elongation at break, in percent.
              TABLE IV                                                    
______________________________________                                    
COMPARATIVE EXAMPLES                                                      
TYPE     Flow    σ                                                  
                        BP   σ                                      
                                  BRK  σ                            
                                            ELG  σ                  
______________________________________                                    
X65-AVE   972    129.8  63.1 9.3  588  24.6 29.0 3.2                      
X55-AVE  1278    181.9  51.0 6.9  512  19.8 24.7 2.2                      
X45-AVE  2059    403.0  33.8 4.4  491  35.7 23.7 3.1                      
X30-AVE  2518    322.6  29.2 2.6  467  26.0 21.8 2.4                      
X25-AVE  3558    481.0  22.8 2.6  469  22.8 23.3 2.3                      
______________________________________                                    
In Table IV, the values reported for each comparative example, the values reported are the arithmetic mean of all values for actual commercial production of a substantial number of rolls of membrane, produced as indicated in Table I, under the same conditions as those employed in the present invention, except as noted above.
The principles, preferred embodiments, and modes of operation of the present invention have been described in the forgoing specification and examples. The invention is not intended to be constrained thereby, or construed as limited to the particular forms disclosed, since these are intended to be illustrative rather than restrictive. Variations and changes may be made by those skilled in the art without departing from the spirit and scope of the present invention as defined in the following claims.

Claims (3)

What is claimed is:
1. An asymmetric integral skinned polymer membrane comprising:
A. a pourous skin having skin pores with a controlling diameter within the range of from about 0.001 micrometers to about 0.5 micrometers, and a standard deviation of pore diameter, as determined by the bubble point methods, of less than 3,
B. a support region having a highly asymmetric spinodal structure,
C. said membrane having a standard deviation of flow rate of less than about 100 and a flow rate covariance of less than about 6.
2. The membrane of claim 1 wherein said polymer is a polysulfone.
3. The membrane of claim 2 wherein said membrane has a standard deviation of flow rate of less than 75 and a flow rate covariance of less than about 5.
US07/838,694 1991-03-26 1992-02-21 Ultraporous and microporous integral membranes Expired - Lifetime US5188734A (en)

Priority Applications (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US07/838,694 US5188734A (en) 1991-03-26 1992-02-21 Ultraporous and microporous integral membranes

Applications Claiming Priority (2)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US07/674,907 US5171445A (en) 1991-03-26 1991-03-26 Ultraporous and microporous membranes and method of making membranes
US07/838,694 US5188734A (en) 1991-03-26 1992-02-21 Ultraporous and microporous integral membranes

Related Parent Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US07/674,907 Division US5171445A (en) 1991-03-26 1991-03-26 Ultraporous and microporous membranes and method of making membranes

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
US5188734A true US5188734A (en) 1993-02-23

Family

ID=27101242

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US07/838,694 Expired - Lifetime US5188734A (en) 1991-03-26 1992-02-21 Ultraporous and microporous integral membranes

Country Status (1)

Country Link
US (1) US5188734A (en)

Cited By (53)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US5834107A (en) * 1996-01-22 1998-11-10 Usf Filtration And Separations Group Inc. Highly porous polyvinylidene difluoride membranes
US5846422A (en) * 1994-03-04 1998-12-08 Memtec America Corporation Large pore synthetic polymer membranes
US6045899A (en) * 1996-12-12 2000-04-04 Usf Filtration & Separations Group, Inc. Highly assymetric, hydrophilic, microfiltration membranes having large pore diameters
US6103172A (en) * 1998-04-07 2000-08-15 Pall Corporation Method of preparaing a porous polytetrafluoroethylene membranne
US6146747A (en) * 1997-01-22 2000-11-14 Usf Filtration And Separations Group Inc. Highly porous polyvinylidene difluoride membranes
US6258272B1 (en) 1999-04-09 2001-07-10 Usf Filtrations And Separations Group, Inc. Internal hydrophilic membranes from blended anionic copolymers
US6264809B1 (en) 1998-10-30 2001-07-24 Pti Advanced Filtration, Inc. Enhanced membrane electrode devices useful for electrodeposition coating
US6277281B1 (en) * 1994-03-04 2001-08-21 Usf Filtration And Separations Group Inc. Large pore synthetic polymer membranes
US6309546B1 (en) 1997-01-10 2001-10-30 Ellipsis Corporation Micro and ultrafilters with controlled pore sizes and pore size distribution and methods for making
EP1149625A1 (en) * 2000-04-26 2001-10-31 USF Filtration and Separations Group Inc. Internal hydrophilic membranes from blended anionic copolymers
WO2002005937A2 (en) * 2000-07-14 2002-01-24 Usf Filtration And Separations Group Inc. Asymmetric, permanently hydrophilic filtration membranes
US20020127387A1 (en) * 2000-08-07 2002-09-12 Richard Sale Pre-metered, unsupported multilayer microporous membrane
US6612447B1 (en) 2000-07-24 2003-09-02 Baxter International Inc. Blood collection systems and filters using a porous membrane element
US20030207020A1 (en) * 2001-05-31 2003-11-06 Villareal Plaridel K. Stent mounting device and a method of using the same to coat a stent
US20030211230A1 (en) * 2001-06-28 2003-11-13 Pacetti Stephen D. Stent mounting assembly and a method of using the same to coat a stent
US6706184B2 (en) 2000-08-07 2004-03-16 Cuno Incorporated Unsupported multizone microporous membrane
US20040060508A1 (en) * 2001-06-28 2004-04-01 Pacetti Stephen D. Stent mounting device
US20040062853A1 (en) * 2001-06-27 2004-04-01 Pacetti Stephen D. Mandrel for supporting a stent and a method of using the mandrel to coat a stent
US20040153117A1 (en) * 2003-01-30 2004-08-05 Clubb Thomas L. Embolic filters with controlled pore size
US20040153118A1 (en) * 2003-01-30 2004-08-05 Clubb Thomas L. Embolic filters having multiple layers and controlled pore size
US20040154978A1 (en) * 2000-08-07 2004-08-12 Richard Sale Pre-metered, unsupported multilayer microporous membrane
US20040187775A1 (en) * 2002-09-24 2004-09-30 Cameron Kerrigan Coupling device for a stent support fixture
US20040236417A1 (en) * 1997-04-24 2004-11-25 Yan John Y. Coated endovascular stent
US20040265475A1 (en) * 2000-10-26 2004-12-30 Hossainy Syed F.A. Selective coating of medical devices
US20050069630A1 (en) * 2003-09-30 2005-03-31 Advanced Cardiovascular Systems, Inc. Stent mandrel fixture and method for selectively coating surfaces of a stent
US20050164025A1 (en) * 2003-09-26 2005-07-28 Pti Advanced Filtration, Inc. Semipermeable hydrophilic membrane
US20050265960A1 (en) * 2004-05-26 2005-12-01 Pacetti Stephen D Polymers containing poly(ester amides) and agents for use with medical articles and methods of fabricating the same
US20050288481A1 (en) * 2004-04-30 2005-12-29 Desnoyer Jessica R Design of poly(ester amides) for the control of agent-release from polymeric compositions
US20060043650A1 (en) * 2004-08-26 2006-03-02 Hossainy Syed F Methods for manufacturing a coated stent-balloon assembly
US20060210702A1 (en) * 2002-12-12 2006-09-21 Advanced Cardiovascular Systems, Inc. Clamp mandrel fixture and a method of using the same to minimize coating defects
US20060216431A1 (en) * 2005-03-28 2006-09-28 Kerrigan Cameron K Electrostatic abluminal coating of a stent crimped on a balloon catheter
US20060280770A1 (en) * 2000-12-28 2006-12-14 Hossainy Syed F Coating for implantable devices and a method of forming the same
US20060287715A1 (en) * 2005-06-20 2006-12-21 Atladottir Svava M Method of manufacturing an implantable polymeric medical device
US20070003688A1 (en) * 2005-06-30 2007-01-04 Advanced Cardiovascular Systems, Inc. Stent fixture and method for reducing coating defects
US20070148251A1 (en) * 2005-12-22 2007-06-28 Hossainy Syed F A Nanoparticle releasing medical devices
US20070259099A1 (en) * 2006-05-04 2007-11-08 Jason Van Sciver Rotatable support elements for stents
US20070292495A1 (en) * 2006-06-15 2007-12-20 Ludwig Florian N Nanoshells for drug delivery
US20070298257A1 (en) * 2006-06-23 2007-12-27 Florian Niklas Ludwig Nanoshells on polymers
US7323209B1 (en) 2003-05-15 2008-01-29 Advanced Cardiovascular Systems, Inc. Apparatus and method for coating stents
US7335265B1 (en) 2002-10-08 2008-02-26 Advanced Cardiovascular Systems Inc. Apparatus and method for coating stents
US7354480B1 (en) 2003-02-26 2008-04-08 Advanced Cardiovascular Systems, Inc. Stent mandrel fixture and system for reducing coating defects
US20090299463A1 (en) * 2001-11-30 2009-12-03 Advanced Cardiovascular Systems, Inc. Modified Surface For An Implantable Device And A Method Of Producing The Same
US7735449B1 (en) 2005-07-28 2010-06-15 Advanced Cardiovascular Systems, Inc. Stent fixture having rounded support structures and method for use thereof
US7867547B2 (en) 2005-12-19 2011-01-11 Advanced Cardiovascular Systems, Inc. Selectively coating luminal surfaces of stents
US7892592B1 (en) 2004-11-30 2011-02-22 Advanced Cardiovascular Systems, Inc. Coating abluminal surfaces of stents and other implantable medical devices
US7985441B1 (en) 2006-05-04 2011-07-26 Yiwen Tang Purification of polymers for coating applications
US8042485B1 (en) 2003-12-30 2011-10-25 Advanced Cardiovascular Systems, Inc. Stent mandrel fixture and method for coating stents
US8048441B2 (en) 2007-06-25 2011-11-01 Abbott Cardiovascular Systems, Inc. Nanobead releasing medical devices
US8123799B1 (en) 2001-11-30 2012-02-28 Advanced Cardiovascular Systems, Inc. Modified implantable device surface and a method of making the same
US8349388B1 (en) 2004-03-18 2013-01-08 Advanced Cardiovascular Systems, Inc. Method of coating a stent
US8603530B2 (en) 2006-06-14 2013-12-10 Abbott Cardiovascular Systems Inc. Nanoshell therapy
US9005496B2 (en) 2012-02-01 2015-04-14 Pall Corporation Asymmetric membranes
EP3824992A1 (en) 2019-11-22 2021-05-26 Pall Corporation Filter for removing silica from ultra pure water and method of use

Citations (13)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3158532A (en) * 1960-12-06 1964-11-24 Pall Corp Tapered pore filter elements
US3615024A (en) * 1968-08-26 1971-10-26 Amicon Corp High flow membrane
US3883626A (en) * 1972-11-21 1975-05-13 Asahi Chemical Ind Porous cellulose acetate membrane and a process for the manufacture of same
US3907774A (en) * 1973-06-15 1975-09-23 Upjohn Co Celestosaminide antibiotic derivatives
US3988245A (en) * 1971-09-07 1976-10-26 Aqua-Chem, Inc. Anisotropic polyvinyl formal resin microporous membrane and its preparation
US4177150A (en) * 1976-09-08 1979-12-04 Asahi Kasei Kogyo Kabushiki Kaisha Dried porous acrylonitrile polymer membrane, process for producing same and separators made therefrom
US4220543A (en) * 1977-09-06 1980-09-02 Kuraray Co., Ltd. Ethylene-vinyl alcohol membranes having improved properties and a method of producing the same
US4229291A (en) * 1977-11-21 1980-10-21 Hoechst Aktiengesellschaft Permselective membrane and use
US4247498A (en) * 1976-08-30 1981-01-27 Akzona Incorporated Methods for making microporous products
US4629563A (en) * 1980-03-14 1986-12-16 Brunswick Corporation Asymmetric membranes
GB2199786A (en) * 1985-07-15 1988-07-20 Fuji Photo Film Co Ltd Polymeric micro-porous membranes and their production
US4774039A (en) * 1980-03-14 1988-09-27 Brunswick Corporation Dispersing casting of integral skinned highly asymmetric polymer membranes
US4814082A (en) * 1986-10-20 1989-03-21 Memtec North America Corporation Ultrafiltration thin film membranes

Patent Citations (14)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3158532A (en) * 1960-12-06 1964-11-24 Pall Corp Tapered pore filter elements
US3615024A (en) * 1968-08-26 1971-10-26 Amicon Corp High flow membrane
US3988245A (en) * 1971-09-07 1976-10-26 Aqua-Chem, Inc. Anisotropic polyvinyl formal resin microporous membrane and its preparation
US3883626A (en) * 1972-11-21 1975-05-13 Asahi Chemical Ind Porous cellulose acetate membrane and a process for the manufacture of same
US3907774A (en) * 1973-06-15 1975-09-23 Upjohn Co Celestosaminide antibiotic derivatives
US4247498A (en) * 1976-08-30 1981-01-27 Akzona Incorporated Methods for making microporous products
US4177150A (en) * 1976-09-08 1979-12-04 Asahi Kasei Kogyo Kabushiki Kaisha Dried porous acrylonitrile polymer membrane, process for producing same and separators made therefrom
US4220543A (en) * 1977-09-06 1980-09-02 Kuraray Co., Ltd. Ethylene-vinyl alcohol membranes having improved properties and a method of producing the same
US4229291A (en) * 1977-11-21 1980-10-21 Hoechst Aktiengesellschaft Permselective membrane and use
US4629563A (en) * 1980-03-14 1986-12-16 Brunswick Corporation Asymmetric membranes
US4774039A (en) * 1980-03-14 1988-09-27 Brunswick Corporation Dispersing casting of integral skinned highly asymmetric polymer membranes
US4629563B1 (en) * 1980-03-14 1997-06-03 Memtec North America Asymmetric membranes
GB2199786A (en) * 1985-07-15 1988-07-20 Fuji Photo Film Co Ltd Polymeric micro-porous membranes and their production
US4814082A (en) * 1986-10-20 1989-03-21 Memtec North America Corporation Ultrafiltration thin film membranes

Non-Patent Citations (2)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Title
Galen W. Ewing, "Instrumental Methods of Chemical Analysis," Third Edition pp. 58-62.
Galen W. Ewing, Instrumental Methods of Chemical Analysis, Third Edition pp. 58 62. *

Cited By (125)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US6440306B1 (en) * 1994-03-04 2002-08-27 Pall Corporation Large pore synthetic polymer membranes
US5846422A (en) * 1994-03-04 1998-12-08 Memtec America Corporation Large pore synthetic polymer membranes
US5979670A (en) * 1994-03-04 1999-11-09 Usf Filtration And Separations Group Inc. Large pore synthetic polymer membranes
US6277281B1 (en) * 1994-03-04 2001-08-21 Usf Filtration And Separations Group Inc. Large pore synthetic polymer membranes
US6110369A (en) * 1994-03-04 2000-08-29 Usf Filtration And Separations Group, Inc. Large pore synthetic polymer membranes
US5834107A (en) * 1996-01-22 1998-11-10 Usf Filtration And Separations Group Inc. Highly porous polyvinylidene difluoride membranes
US6110309A (en) * 1996-01-22 2000-08-29 Usf Filtration And Separations Group, Inc. Process of making a polyvinylidene difluoride membrane
US6045899A (en) * 1996-12-12 2000-04-04 Usf Filtration & Separations Group, Inc. Highly assymetric, hydrophilic, microfiltration membranes having large pore diameters
US20040065607A1 (en) * 1996-12-12 2004-04-08 I-Fan Wang Highly asymmetric, hydrophilic, microfiltration membranes having large pore diameters
US20050011834A1 (en) * 1996-12-12 2005-01-20 I-Fan Wang Highly asymmetric, hydrophilic, microfiltration membranes having large pore diameters
US7125493B2 (en) 1996-12-12 2006-10-24 Pall Corporation Highly asymmetric, hydrophilic, microfiltration membranes having large pore diameters
US6565782B1 (en) 1996-12-12 2003-05-20 Pall Corporation Highly asymmetric, hydrophilic, microfiltration membranes having large pore diameters
US6939468B2 (en) 1996-12-12 2005-09-06 Pall Corporation Highly asymmetric, hydrophilic, microfiltration membranes having large pore diameters
US20020074282A1 (en) * 1997-01-10 2002-06-20 Herrmann Robert C. Micro and ultrafilters with controlled pore sizes and pore size distribution and methods of making cross-reference to related patent applications
US6309546B1 (en) 1997-01-10 2001-10-30 Ellipsis Corporation Micro and ultrafilters with controlled pore sizes and pore size distribution and methods for making
US6146747A (en) * 1997-01-22 2000-11-14 Usf Filtration And Separations Group Inc. Highly porous polyvinylidene difluoride membranes
US20060178738A1 (en) * 1997-04-24 2006-08-10 Yan John Y Coated endovascular stent
US20040236417A1 (en) * 1997-04-24 2004-11-25 Yan John Y. Coated endovascular stent
US6274043B1 (en) 1998-04-07 2001-08-14 Pall Corporation Porous polytetrafluoroethylene membrane
US6103172A (en) * 1998-04-07 2000-08-15 Pall Corporation Method of preparaing a porous polytetrafluoroethylene membranne
US6264809B1 (en) 1998-10-30 2001-07-24 Pti Advanced Filtration, Inc. Enhanced membrane electrode devices useful for electrodeposition coating
US6258272B1 (en) 1999-04-09 2001-07-10 Usf Filtrations And Separations Group, Inc. Internal hydrophilic membranes from blended anionic copolymers
EP1149625A1 (en) * 2000-04-26 2001-10-31 USF Filtration and Separations Group Inc. Internal hydrophilic membranes from blended anionic copolymers
WO2002005937A2 (en) * 2000-07-14 2002-01-24 Usf Filtration And Separations Group Inc. Asymmetric, permanently hydrophilic filtration membranes
WO2002005937A3 (en) * 2000-07-14 2002-08-29 Usf Filtration & Separations Asymmetric, permanently hydrophilic filtration membranes
US6824688B2 (en) 2000-07-24 2004-11-30 Baxter International Inc. Blood collection systems and methods using a porous membrane element
US20030234226A1 (en) * 2000-07-24 2003-12-25 Baxter International Inc. Blood collection systems and methods using a porous membrane element
US6612447B1 (en) 2000-07-24 2003-09-02 Baxter International Inc. Blood collection systems and filters using a porous membrane element
US20020127387A1 (en) * 2000-08-07 2002-09-12 Richard Sale Pre-metered, unsupported multilayer microporous membrane
US20040124135A1 (en) * 2000-08-07 2004-07-01 Richard Sale Unsupported multizone microporous membrane
US6736971B2 (en) 2000-08-07 2004-05-18 Cuno Incorporated Pre-metered, unsupported multilayer microporous membrane
US6994789B2 (en) 2000-08-07 2006-02-07 Cuno Incorporated Pre-metered, unsupported multilayer microporous membrane
US20040154978A1 (en) * 2000-08-07 2004-08-12 Richard Sale Pre-metered, unsupported multilayer microporous membrane
US20060196830A1 (en) * 2000-08-07 2006-09-07 3M Innovative Properties Company Pre-metered, unsupported multilayer microporous membrane
US6706184B2 (en) 2000-08-07 2004-03-16 Cuno Incorporated Unsupported multizone microporous membrane
US20040265475A1 (en) * 2000-10-26 2004-12-30 Hossainy Syed F.A. Selective coating of medical devices
US20060280770A1 (en) * 2000-12-28 2006-12-14 Hossainy Syed F Coating for implantable devices and a method of forming the same
US20050096730A1 (en) * 2001-05-31 2005-05-05 Villareal Plaridel K. Stent mounting device and a method of using the same to coat a stent
US20030207020A1 (en) * 2001-05-31 2003-11-06 Villareal Plaridel K. Stent mounting device and a method of using the same to coat a stent
US6887510B2 (en) 2001-05-31 2005-05-03 Advanced Cardiovascular Systems, Inc. Method of using a stent mounting device to coat a stent
US7485335B2 (en) 2001-05-31 2009-02-03 Advanced Cardiovascular Systems, Inc. Stent mounting device and a method of using the same to coat a stent
US20060035012A1 (en) * 2001-06-27 2006-02-16 Advanced Cardiovascular Systems, Inc. Method of using a mandrel to coat a stent
US20040062853A1 (en) * 2001-06-27 2004-04-01 Pacetti Stephen D. Mandrel for supporting a stent and a method of using the mandrel to coat a stent
US20060065193A1 (en) * 2001-06-27 2006-03-30 Advanced Cardiovascular Systems, Inc. Device for supporting a stent during coating of the stent
US6955723B2 (en) 2001-06-27 2005-10-18 Advanced Cardiovascular Systems, Inc. Mandrel for supporting a stent and method of using the mandrel to coat a stent
US7985440B2 (en) 2001-06-27 2011-07-26 Advanced Cardiovascular Systems, Inc. Method of using a mandrel to coat a stent
US20050261764A1 (en) * 2001-06-28 2005-11-24 Pacetti Stephen D Method of using a stent mounting device to coat a stent
US7485333B2 (en) 2001-06-28 2009-02-03 Advanced Cardiovascular Systems, Inc. Method of using a stent mounting device to coat a stent
US20030211230A1 (en) * 2001-06-28 2003-11-13 Pacetti Stephen D. Stent mounting assembly and a method of using the same to coat a stent
US20040060508A1 (en) * 2001-06-28 2004-04-01 Pacetti Stephen D. Stent mounting device
US8470019B1 (en) 2001-11-30 2013-06-25 Advanced Cardiovascular Systems, Inc. TiNxOy modified surface for an implantable device and a method of producing the same
US8834555B2 (en) 2001-11-30 2014-09-16 Abbott Cardiovascular Systems Inc. TiNxCy modified surface for an implantable device and a method of producing the same
US8123799B1 (en) 2001-11-30 2012-02-28 Advanced Cardiovascular Systems, Inc. Modified implantable device surface and a method of making the same
US8864818B2 (en) 2001-11-30 2014-10-21 Abbott Cardiovascular Systems Inc. TiNxOy Modified surface for an implantable device and a method of producing the same
US8382815B2 (en) 2001-11-30 2013-02-26 Advanced Cardiovascular Systems, Inc. TiNxCy modified surface for an implantable device and a method of producing the same
US20090299463A1 (en) * 2001-11-30 2009-12-03 Advanced Cardiovascular Systems, Inc. Modified Surface For An Implantable Device And A Method Of Producing The Same
US20040187775A1 (en) * 2002-09-24 2004-09-30 Cameron Kerrigan Coupling device for a stent support fixture
US7485334B2 (en) 2002-09-24 2009-02-03 Advanced Cardiovascular Systems, Inc. Stent mandrel fixture and method for minimizing coating defects
US6972054B2 (en) 2002-09-24 2005-12-06 Advanced Cardiovascular Systems, Inc. Coupling device for a stent support fixture
US20040191405A1 (en) * 2002-09-24 2004-09-30 Cameron Kerrigan Stent mandrel fixture and method for minimizing coating defects
US20080110396A1 (en) * 2002-10-08 2008-05-15 Hossainy Syed F System for Coating Stents
US20080107795A1 (en) * 2002-10-08 2008-05-08 Hossainy Syed F Method for Coating Stents
US7556837B2 (en) 2002-10-08 2009-07-07 Advanced Cardiovascular Systems, Inc. Method for coating stents
US7335265B1 (en) 2002-10-08 2008-02-26 Advanced Cardiovascular Systems Inc. Apparatus and method for coating stents
US8042487B2 (en) 2002-10-08 2011-10-25 Advanced Cardiovascular Systems, Inc. System for coating stents
US20060207501A1 (en) * 2002-12-12 2006-09-21 Advanced Cardiovascular Systems, Inc. Clamp mandrel fixture and a method of using the same to minimize coating defects
US20060210702A1 (en) * 2002-12-12 2006-09-21 Advanced Cardiovascular Systems, Inc. Clamp mandrel fixture and a method of using the same to minimize coating defects
US7572336B2 (en) 2002-12-12 2009-08-11 Advanced Cardiovascular Systems, Inc. Clamp mandrel fixture and a method of using the same to minimize coating defects
US7648725B2 (en) 2002-12-12 2010-01-19 Advanced Cardiovascular Systems, Inc. Clamp mandrel fixture and a method of using the same to minimize coating defects
US7220271B2 (en) * 2003-01-30 2007-05-22 Ev3 Inc. Embolic filters having multiple layers and controlled pore size
US8409242B2 (en) 2003-01-30 2013-04-02 Covidien Lp Embolic filters with controlled pore size
US9603692B2 (en) 2003-01-30 2017-03-28 Covidien Lp Embolic filters with controlled pore size
US7323001B2 (en) * 2003-01-30 2008-01-29 Ev3 Inc. Embolic filters with controlled pore size
US20070198051A1 (en) * 2003-01-30 2007-08-23 Ev3 Inc. Embolic filters having multiple layers and controlled pore size
US20040153118A1 (en) * 2003-01-30 2004-08-05 Clubb Thomas L. Embolic filters having multiple layers and controlled pore size
US20040153117A1 (en) * 2003-01-30 2004-08-05 Clubb Thomas L. Embolic filters with controlled pore size
US8137376B2 (en) 2003-01-30 2012-03-20 Tyco Healthcare Group Lp Embolic filters having multiple layers and controlled pore size
US20070135834A1 (en) * 2003-01-30 2007-06-14 Ev3 Inc. Embolic filters with controlled pore size
US20080124452A1 (en) * 2003-02-26 2008-05-29 Arkady Kokish Method for reducing stent coating defects
US7794777B2 (en) 2003-02-26 2010-09-14 Advanced Cardiovascular Systems, Inc. Method for reducing stent coating defects
US7354480B1 (en) 2003-02-26 2008-04-08 Advanced Cardiovascular Systems, Inc. Stent mandrel fixture and system for reducing coating defects
US20080103588A1 (en) * 2003-05-15 2008-05-01 Advanced Cardiovascular Systems, Inc. Method for coating stents
US8689729B2 (en) 2003-05-15 2014-04-08 Abbott Cardiovascular Systems Inc. Apparatus for coating stents
US7749554B2 (en) 2003-05-15 2010-07-06 Advanced Cardiovascular Systems, Inc. Method for coating stents
US7323209B1 (en) 2003-05-15 2008-01-29 Advanced Cardiovascular Systems, Inc. Apparatus and method for coating stents
US7517581B2 (en) 2003-09-26 2009-04-14 Parker-Hannifin Corporation Semipermeable hydrophilic membrane
US20050164025A1 (en) * 2003-09-26 2005-07-28 Pti Advanced Filtration, Inc. Semipermeable hydrophilic membrane
US20070116855A1 (en) * 2003-09-30 2007-05-24 Advanced Cardiovascular Systems, Inc. Stent mandrel fixture and method for selectively coating surfaces of a stent
US20050069630A1 (en) * 2003-09-30 2005-03-31 Advanced Cardiovascular Systems, Inc. Stent mandrel fixture and method for selectively coating surfaces of a stent
US20070131165A1 (en) * 2003-09-30 2007-06-14 Advanced Cardiovascular Systems, Inc. Stent mandrel fixture and method for selectively coating surfaces of a stent
US8197879B2 (en) 2003-09-30 2012-06-12 Advanced Cardiovascular Systems, Inc. Method for selectively coating surfaces of a stent
US8042485B1 (en) 2003-12-30 2011-10-25 Advanced Cardiovascular Systems, Inc. Stent mandrel fixture and method for coating stents
US8349388B1 (en) 2004-03-18 2013-01-08 Advanced Cardiovascular Systems, Inc. Method of coating a stent
US20050288481A1 (en) * 2004-04-30 2005-12-29 Desnoyer Jessica R Design of poly(ester amides) for the control of agent-release from polymeric compositions
US20050265960A1 (en) * 2004-05-26 2005-12-01 Pacetti Stephen D Polymers containing poly(ester amides) and agents for use with medical articles and methods of fabricating the same
US7648727B2 (en) 2004-08-26 2010-01-19 Advanced Cardiovascular Systems, Inc. Methods for manufacturing a coated stent-balloon assembly
US20060043650A1 (en) * 2004-08-26 2006-03-02 Hossainy Syed F Methods for manufacturing a coated stent-balloon assembly
US7892592B1 (en) 2004-11-30 2011-02-22 Advanced Cardiovascular Systems, Inc. Coating abluminal surfaces of stents and other implantable medical devices
US20060216431A1 (en) * 2005-03-28 2006-09-28 Kerrigan Cameron K Electrostatic abluminal coating of a stent crimped on a balloon catheter
US20060287715A1 (en) * 2005-06-20 2006-12-21 Atladottir Svava M Method of manufacturing an implantable polymeric medical device
US20070003688A1 (en) * 2005-06-30 2007-01-04 Advanced Cardiovascular Systems, Inc. Stent fixture and method for reducing coating defects
US7823533B2 (en) 2005-06-30 2010-11-02 Advanced Cardiovascular Systems, Inc. Stent fixture and method for reducing coating defects
US7735449B1 (en) 2005-07-28 2010-06-15 Advanced Cardiovascular Systems, Inc. Stent fixture having rounded support structures and method for use thereof
US7867547B2 (en) 2005-12-19 2011-01-11 Advanced Cardiovascular Systems, Inc. Selectively coating luminal surfaces of stents
US20070148251A1 (en) * 2005-12-22 2007-06-28 Hossainy Syed F A Nanoparticle releasing medical devices
US8069814B2 (en) 2006-05-04 2011-12-06 Advanced Cardiovascular Systems, Inc. Stent support devices
US8741379B2 (en) 2006-05-04 2014-06-03 Advanced Cardiovascular Systems, Inc. Rotatable support elements for stents
US20070259099A1 (en) * 2006-05-04 2007-11-08 Jason Van Sciver Rotatable support elements for stents
US8003156B2 (en) 2006-05-04 2011-08-23 Advanced Cardiovascular Systems, Inc. Rotatable support elements for stents
US8465789B2 (en) 2006-05-04 2013-06-18 Advanced Cardiovascular Systems, Inc. Rotatable support elements for stents
US8596215B2 (en) 2006-05-04 2013-12-03 Advanced Cardiovascular Systems, Inc. Rotatable support elements for stents
US8637110B2 (en) 2006-05-04 2014-01-28 Advanced Cardiovascular Systems, Inc. Rotatable support elements for stents
US7985441B1 (en) 2006-05-04 2011-07-26 Yiwen Tang Purification of polymers for coating applications
US8808342B2 (en) 2006-06-14 2014-08-19 Abbott Cardiovascular Systems Inc. Nanoshell therapy
US8603530B2 (en) 2006-06-14 2013-12-10 Abbott Cardiovascular Systems Inc. Nanoshell therapy
US8048448B2 (en) 2006-06-15 2011-11-01 Abbott Cardiovascular Systems Inc. Nanoshells for drug delivery
US20070292495A1 (en) * 2006-06-15 2007-12-20 Ludwig Florian N Nanoshells for drug delivery
US8017237B2 (en) 2006-06-23 2011-09-13 Abbott Cardiovascular Systems, Inc. Nanoshells on polymers
US8592036B2 (en) 2006-06-23 2013-11-26 Abbott Cardiovascular Systems Inc. Nanoshells on polymers
US8293367B2 (en) 2006-06-23 2012-10-23 Advanced Cardiovascular Systems, Inc. Nanoshells on polymers
US20070298257A1 (en) * 2006-06-23 2007-12-27 Florian Niklas Ludwig Nanoshells on polymers
US8048441B2 (en) 2007-06-25 2011-11-01 Abbott Cardiovascular Systems, Inc. Nanobead releasing medical devices
US9005496B2 (en) 2012-02-01 2015-04-14 Pall Corporation Asymmetric membranes
US9415347B2 (en) 2012-02-01 2016-08-16 Pall Corporation Asymmetric membranes
EP3824992A1 (en) 2019-11-22 2021-05-26 Pall Corporation Filter for removing silica from ultra pure water and method of use

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US5188734A (en) Ultraporous and microporous integral membranes
US5171445A (en) Ultraporous and microporous membranes and method of making membranes
Ismail et al. Effects of phase inversion and rheological factors on formation of defect-free and ultrathin-skinned asymmetric polysulfone membranes for gas separation
Soroko et al. Impact of TiO2 nanoparticles on morphology and performance of crosslinked polyimide organic solvent nanofiltration (OSN) membranes
Pinnau et al. Structures and gas separation properties of asymmetric polysulfone membranes made by dry, wet, and dry/wet phase inversion
Shang et al. Preparation and membrane performance of poly (ethylene-co-vinyl alcohol) hollow fiber membrane via thermally induced phase separation
US6013688A (en) PVDF microporous membrane and method
Nunes et al. Ultrafiltration membranes from PVDF/PMMA blends
KR960004609B1 (en) Membrane drying process and system
US3871950A (en) Hollow fibers of acrylonitrile polymers for ultrafilter and method for producing the same
CA2359050C (en) Integrally asymmetrical polyolefin membrane
Çulfaz et al. Hollow fiber ultrafiltration membranes with microstructured inner skin
Girones et al. Polymeric microsieves produced by phase separation micromolding
Pinnau et al. Influence of quench medium on the structures and gas permeation properties of polysulfone membranes made by wet and dry/wet phase inversion
US5049276A (en) Hollow fiber membrane
WO1999059707A1 (en) Highly porous polyvinylidene difluoride membranes
Hamad et al. Comparison of gas separation performance and morphology of homogeneous and composite PPO membranes
US6126826A (en) PVDF microporous membrane and method
JP3467940B2 (en) Composite membrane, method of making and using the same
IE45467B1 (en) Semipermeable membranes and method for producing same
AU735146B2 (en) Ultraporous and microporous membranes
US4885092A (en) Process for the manufacture of asymmetric, porous membranes and product thereof
EP0147570B1 (en) Process for the manufacture of asymmetric, porous membranes and product thereof
CA1184716A (en) Plasma phoresis membrane
Shang et al. Effect of glycerol content in cooling bath on performance of poly (ethylene-co-vinyl alcohol) hollow fiber membranes

Legal Events

Date Code Title Description
STCF Information on status: patent grant

Free format text: PATENTED CASE

FPAY Fee payment

Year of fee payment: 4

FEPP Fee payment procedure

Free format text: PAYOR NUMBER ASSIGNED (ORIGINAL EVENT CODE: ASPN); ENTITY STATUS OF PATENT OWNER: LARGE ENTITY

FPAY Fee payment

Year of fee payment: 8

FPAY Fee payment

Year of fee payment: 12